As a risk manager on Wall Street for the past 30 years I can personally attest to the fact that while pandemic insurance and resulting business interruption insurance was available pre COVID (and yes, I looked at the product), the cost of the product, deductibles and relatively small limits available didnt make sense from our prospective. It is hard to justify the spend for such a black swan event. Very few people bought it outside of specialty one time events such as the Tokyo Olympics or Wimbledon. Most of the hospitality and entertainment sector didnt buy it, and most of the Fortune 1000 didnt buy it. Your spend goes to things that are more likely to impact you, like windstorm, wildfires etc. For most of us that do this, you didnt pass on the coverage because you were clueless, you passed on it because you have a limited spend and try to use it where it makes the most sense, based on the most likely risks you see at the time. Now, of course, the coverage has dried up, but you may see some type of government backstop in the future like how we deal with terrorism risk through the TRIA act. Also, even if we did buy it, given the way the bank has performed during COVID, where we have made MORE money due to the pandemic, we wouldnt have had a BI claim to make anyway. Same thing happened to us post 9/11, we made MORE money after 9/11 than we were making before. Not every business loses during black swan events, some make more money. Which is exactly why you are seeing the disconnect to the pain of businesses on Main St, but Wall Street and companies like Amazon and Apple that are killing it.